Southern California -- this just in

Dorner manhunt: Authorities gear up for continued search in Big Bear

February 8, 2013 | 8:07
am

Snow was falling over Big Bear on Friday morning as authorities prepared for another day of searching for the ex-Los Angeles police officer accused of killing three people, wounding two others and threatening "unconventional and asymmetrical warfare" against police.

Officials were at a local command center by daybreak, saying they had searched homes and forest areas past midnight. They readied themselves for a winter storm Friday that is expected to hamper visibility and mobility not only for them, but for fugitive Christopher Jordan Dorner -- if he is still out there.

Authorities are expected to provide updates about the massive, multi-agency manhunt for Dorner, 33, at a 9 a.m. news conference. At a briefing late Thursday, officials said they found fresh tracks thought to be Dorner's but had not yet located him.

San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department spokeswoman Cindy Bachman said 100
officers were staging at the Bear Mountain Resort Friday morning, preparing to deploy
teams. The search would focus on forest areas near where a burned-out truck thought to belong to Dorner was found,
she said.

Dorner is wanted in connection with a double homicide in Irvine
on Sunday and the shooting of three police officers, one fatally, in
Riverside County on Thursday. Authorities described him as "armed and
extremely dangerous," and alerts about him were issued across the state
and in Nevada.

In a Facebook manifesto
police say Dorner wrote, he ranted against Los Angeles Police Department personnel who he said
fired him unfairly. He threatened revenge, and "unconventional and
asymmetrical warfare" against police and their families, saying he would
stalk them "where you work, live, eat, and sleep."

The search moved to Big Bear after the burning truck was found on a forest road. Schools were locked down, as was the Bear Mountain Resort, as a fatigue-clad SWAT team began combing the area. About 125 officers would eventually be used to search homes door-to-door and follow what was believed to be Dorner's trail.

Bear Valley schools remained closed Friday as the manhunt continued, although area ski resorts were open.

Police said they are working to discern a pattern in Dorner's recent
movements. A man matching his description tried to steal a boat
about 10:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Southwestern Yacht Club in Point Loma,
tying up the elderly owner, threatening him with a gun and saying he
wanted to flee to Mexico.

The thief gave up when a rope got tangled in
the propeller. Dorner's old LAPD badge was found a short distance from
the boat.

Three hours later, 100 miles away near an offramp of Interstate 15 in
Corona, a resident recognized Dorner's Nissan Titan pickup truck and
flagged down LAPD officers who were en route to guarding one of his
would-be targets, police said.

After a brief chase, Dorner opened fire with a rifle, grazing one
officer in the head with a bullet that came within inches of killing
him, authorities said. Police returned fire, but the gunman escaped.

Minutes later in nearby Riverside, two city police officers were
attacked as they sat in their marked patrol car at a red light at the
corner of Magnolia and Arlington avenues, police said. Bullets
penetrated the windshield and struck both officers in the chest, killing
a 34-year-old veteran and wounding a 27-year-old officer he was
training. That officer is expected to survive.

It was a "cowardly ambush," said Riverside Police Chief Sergio
Diaz.

Police across the Inland Empire converged on Riverside to help with
the manhunt, and officers held rifles and shotguns as they stood guard
outside the police station.

"My opinion of the suspect is unprintable," Diaz said. "The manifesto
I think speaks for itself as evidence enough of a depraved and
abandoned mind and heart."

The names of the officers who were shot have not been released.

At schools
near the shootings, some wary parents kept their children home. Other
schools were closed.

As news of the shootings crackled across police radios before dawn Thursday, the hunt for Dorner's Nissan Titan pickup truck intensified.

About 5:20 a.m. in Torrance, two women were delivering the Los
Angeles Times from their blue pickup when LAPD officers spotted the
truck.

The police apparently mistook the truck for Dorner's and riddled it
with bullets. The women, a mother-and-daughter team, were rushed to a
hospital.

The mother, who is in her 70s, was shot in the shoulder. She was
listed in stable condition. Her daughter was injured by shattered glass.

About 25 minutes after that shooting, Torrance police opened fire after
spotting another truck similar to Dorner's at Flagler Lane and Beryl
Street. No one was reported hurt.

At a news conference Thursday morning, LAPD Chief Charlie Beck called the situation
"extremely worrisome and scary, especially to the police officers
involved." Asked what he would say to Dorner, Beck replied: "I would
tell him to turn himself in. This has gone far enough. No one else needs
to die."